SkepticalBaldEngineeringDude

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SkepticalBaldEngineeringDude

SkepticalBaldEngineeringDude

@BaldSkeptical

With a keenly trained nose for BS, and a strong sense for the absurd.

Virginia Katılım Temmuz 2022
275 Takip Edilen179 Takipçiler
SkepticalBaldEngineeringDude
@AshtonForbes Are there any experiments that support any of this supposition or question the orthodoxy of (frozen for 90 years) accepted physics? Genuinely asking as a devout experimentalist w nontrivial budget.
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Ashton Forbes
Ashton Forbes@AshtonForbes·
Everyone says a wormhole would take a huge amount of energy, and that's exactly why David Froning engineered the 'unlabored acceleration' concept. They aren't producing a huge amount of energy, they found a way around it by conditioning spacetime itself. The craziest part is it has to be David Froning specifically. This plane is transitioning from slower than light to faster than light while at constant momentum at almost no energy cost. That's exactly his model and no one else's. I'm going to hammer the world with these videos and expose the engineers who developed it.
Ashton Forbes@AshtonForbes

Unlabored acceleration requires constant momentum. That’s why the plane is flying in a straight line at a constant speed. Constant velocity keeps the de Broglie wave length the same, lowering the energy requirement for the jump. They literally wormholed a plane.

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Nick Sortor
Nick Sortor@nicksortor·
I have been offered a full-time role as a White House Correspondent for a well-known news network. Financial sacrifices would have to be made to sign on the dotted line, but I genuinely believe I can help push our country forward in the role. Should I do it?
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SkepticalBaldEngineeringDude
Time at 50m demands planning and training, trimix gas to avoid rapture of the deep, decom gas staged and a strict dive/comms plan. Caving at 50m is suicide by snorkel without a fukton of training, gear, forward staging, experience….. extreme caving is the only diving where the buddy system is not recommended because one fatality is better then two (or 5 in this case). This was either rich kids fafo’ing, or a ritual sacrifice.
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BKactual
BKactual@BravoKiloActual·
As someone (yes I’m doing it) who graduated from one of the toughest dive schools in the world and has MANY dives off the California coast (considered to be an extremely challenging/dangerous place to dive)… if dude says “we enter cave at 50 meters” I’m saying… yeah FUCK NO.
Mambo Italiano@mamboitaliano__

🚨 Italy is reeling from the tragedy of five Italians 🇮🇹, including a mother and daughter, in the MALDIVES, who never resurfaced after an exploratory dive A devastating loss that raises a pressing question: are all necessary safety measures being taken in this kind of activity?

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Salty Medic
Salty Medic@MedicNamedHope·
Dear @Windows, I'm not downgrading to windows 11. Suck my dick from the back.
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SkepticalBaldEngineeringDude
SkepticalBaldEngineeringDude@BaldSkeptical·
Kicked seed oils and carbs during covid (deduced everything “settled” was a lie), bald white dude- I no longer sunburn. My polished dome can be in the mid atlantic summer sun all day, and worst case it gets a bit pink for a day. Remarkable, threw out probably 20 sun screen tubes, bottles and sprays 5 years ago.
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Wall Street Mav
Wall Street Mav@WallStreetMav·
Once upon a time they held a dermatology conference in Hawaii. It went as expected on the beach. ☀️
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SkepticalBaldEngineeringDude
SkepticalBaldEngineeringDude@BaldSkeptical·
The lovely Mrs Bald Skeptic has gotten into fermenting foods and most recently Sour Doug. Largely carnivore, our monthly budget is mainly meat and dairy, with a wee bit of fermented veggies. Buying the “last day discount meat” saves 30% and weeks of aging, our vacmaster chamber bagger was definitely a “cry once, laugh many” purchase. Three freezers of meat bought or shot wisely, we could not shop for probably 5 years at this point. Also, freeze drier is stupid expensive but also stupid fun…. Twenty quart jars of freeze dried duck eggs!
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4nt1p4tt3rn 🏴‍☠ Appalachistan Wolf Lodge #47
Since I'm piling on here, our general shopping routine: Trader Joe's: They have certain items that we can't get elsewhere for the same low price (e.g., nut-based cheeses for our daughter), and when they have enough, their potatoes are cheaper than elsewhere. And our dogs and cats prefer the TJ treats. Earth Fare: This is where we spend the bulk of our money. Their store-brand olive oil, when they have it in the large can, is quality. The bulk produce and bulk dry goods are a bargain, particularly with the volume discount on bulk dry. Our daughter likes a particular brand of potato chips that are actually cheaper there. And we only shop on days when they offer their student or veteran discounts, as my wife and I qualify for one or the other. Local Asian and Halal markets: We buy a lot of spices, noodles, and rice from these, at ridiculously low prices. We are always the only white people in either. Local state farmer's market: The majority of our produce comes from here. We do a grocery run once every two weeks, and it generally takes us several hours, plus another hour or so to put everything away once we're home. This time of year, we also routinely buy fresh strawberries from a local farmer. We eat quite a bit of them, and prep and freeze even more for the rest of the year. As they transition to other berries, we buy and store those, too. We also supplement with fresh blueberries, blackberries, peppers, okra, tomatoes, lemons, and potatoes from our garden. Once every couple of years we buy and freeze a whole cow. We smoke, dehydrate, pickle, and can quite a bit of food as well, and stay well-stocked on spices and flours which we order online, as it's cheaper to do so, particularly when we buy enough to get free shipping. Yogurt, kombucha, kefir, cheeses? We order the requisite starters online, and make them ourselves. In Trader Joe's and Earth Fare, we only shop the perimeter of the store (meats, produce, refrigerated items), except for the aforementioned chips our daughter prefers, and the very few items that are in the aisles at TJ's that we buy. We stay on budget, take advantage of discounts and coupons as much as possible, and watch for deals. And, as I said, we eat extremely well. Our pantries, fridge, and freezers are always full. The fridge so much so that putting the leftovers away each night is like playing Tetris, trying to rearrange everything to make enough space to get the one or two containers in there. We waste nothing. Potatoes that sat too long before being prepared? Seed potatoes for the garden. Turkey or beef bones? Frozen to make future broth, which then gets jarred. Fruit or berries getting overripe? Jams and jellies. If you're struggling to have enough money to feed your family, perhaps the problem isn't rising costs. Perhaps it's your choices and behaviors.
4nt1p4tt3rn 🏴‍☠ Appalachistan Wolf Lodge #47@4nt1p4tt3rn

My wife and I even have a term for these people: The Whole Foods Bag syndrome: They don't really care about eating well. They just want to be seen buying everything from Whole Foods. It's performative middle-class white woman BS. E.g., spending $10 for a pound of ground turkey. F'n buy a whole turkey, or even butchered parts, pare the meat from the bone, pull out the tendons, and throw it in a food processor or grinder. Hell, just buy it pre-ground from anywhere other than Whole Foods, it'll be cheaper. And the produce? Go to a damn farmer's market. Not the ones with music and arts and crafts; the ones where there are actual farmers pulling up at 0300 and selling their haul. I won't even start on the pre-made salads. That's just idiocy. Really? You're too lazy to wash and chop your own lettuce and veggies? C'mon. And she paid $5.16 for four lemons. FOUR. LEMONS.

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SkepticalBaldEngineeringDude
SkepticalBaldEngineeringDude@BaldSkeptical·
@4nt1p4tt3rn I paid to have a local crew take down an 80’ pine hanging over my house. Frugal, not frupid. Used vehicles, but sadly do buy firearms new more often than I should.
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4nt1p4tt3rn 🏴‍☠ Appalachistan Wolf Lodge #47
I know multiple millionaires. Some of them are worth 8 figures. A couple, 9. None of this wealth is paper-only. Every one has 7-figure liquid assets, at least. Not a single one of them routinely pays to have their groceries delivered. None has a personal chef. A few have a housekeeping service that comes a couple times a month. Most have landscapers. But all of them live frugally. The few extravagances they have, they have /because/ they otherwise live frugally. They do not pay retail for anything. They do not buy new. They do not blow money on frivolous delivery services. You'd never know their net worth if they were standing next to you. The entire belief system that says rich people are ostentatious and buy new everything and pay people to do everything for them is brainwashing borne from media, social and otherwise, and from the middle-class mindset that consumerism is a sign of wealth. It's not. It's a sign of poverty or near-poverty. Spending all your have, and a lot you don't, to give the outward appearance of wealth.
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0HOUR1
0HOUR1@0hour1·
Who is going to run and get the miracle Pfizer hantavirus clot shot?
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SkepticalBaldEngineeringDude
SkepticalBaldEngineeringDude@BaldSkeptical·
@Jason2bartlett Fucking boers, turning American grass into beautiful steak. How do you not love these boneheads!?!? Welcome to America and please take my money for lovely Beef!
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Jason Bartlett
Jason Bartlett@Jason2bartlett·
Sometimes I have to pinch myself to remind myself I’m living the American dream!
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Shadow Intel
Shadow Intel@TheShadowIntelX·
Remember when YouTube's CEO Susan Wojcicki bragged about deleting over 1 million videos for "vaccine hesitancy" and COVID "misinformation"? She admitted it was a top priority working hand-in-hand with the Biden admin and Fauci, while silencing doctors, scientists, and everyday people asking questions. Now we know the real cost. How many lives were lost because the truth was buried? Big Tech played God, and we're still paying the price.
The Truth Department@TheTruthDpt

Bob Moran: "The mass injecting of more than half the world’s population with that drug is the worst thing that has ever happened in the history of our species and it has happened now. And I know that’s very, very difficult for a lot of people to accept, particularly people who’ve had it, but we are living in an aftermath of that and repercussions will go on, I’m afraid, for a very long time."

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SkepticalBaldEngineeringDude
SkepticalBaldEngineeringDude@BaldSkeptical·
Anti leftover folk are retards. Reheating last night's leftovers in the air fryer and having JUST THE RIGHT AMOUNT left to hit the spot twice is one of life's simple victories. Any dad that doesn't feel satisfaction finishing leftovers hiding in the fridge needs to get his testosterone checked.
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4nt1p4tt3rn 🏴‍☠ Appalachistan Wolf Lodge #47
I suspect many of the anti-leftovers people associate eating leftovers with being poor. My family and I are by no means poor. We're rather well-off. We eat leftovers constantly. We also clip coupons, shop for deals, budget to the penny, and look for every discount we can, on everything. We wash and re-use straws and plastic bags, even tinfoil. We can and pickle foods. We dehydrate. We buy raw dry ingredients in bulk. We buy beef by the cow. We conserve electricity and fuel. Big purchases? We budget and save for them. That $5,000 jacket I'm wearing today? Paid $600 for it from the manufacturer, below wholesale. Our hosehold cleaner? White vinegar. Our laundry detergent? Borax. Our daily beverages (besides coffee, which we get an obscenely good deal on)? Water. We save. We invest. We re-sell items (one of the reasons we buy quality goods). Things like this are /why/ we're well-off. If we spent and wasted the way the average family did, we'd be much worse off.
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Squirrel Matador
Squirrel Matador@BudLightSadness·
During my away time from here I learned that Bryan Johnson is essentially a super villain
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SkepticalBaldEngineeringDude
SkepticalBaldEngineeringDude@BaldSkeptical·
M12 and makita m18 fag here. And a whack of both batts. Hey Fenix, pls do a run of 380 for my lovely daughter, she independently stumbled into your awesomeness and belly laughed over the many memes printed on the bags of boolets in our basement. She works our in a fenix ladyshirt-
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Fenix Ammunition
Fenix Ammunition@FenixAmmunition·
Don't care about watches, let's see how many Milwaukee batteries you've got
Fenix Ammunition tweet media
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SkepticalBaldEngineeringDude
SkepticalBaldEngineeringDude@BaldSkeptical·
@Mericamemed Did the same in college. Oxyacetylene bag, long fuse, helium. In hindsight was hella dumb, if static had set it off early I would have been pink mist.
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MERICA MEMED
MERICA MEMED@Mericamemed·
How to cause local panic in your city
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Hard Pass
Hard Pass@HardPass4·
I hope PSA didn’t sell him that blaster and he paid over MSRP.
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Teddy Schleifer
Teddy Schleifer@teddyschleifer·
In a rare on-record statement, Sergey Brin tells me: "I fled socialism with my family in 1979 and know the devastating, oppressive society it created in the Soviet Union. I don’t want California to end up in the same place.” nytimes.com/2026/04/27/us/…
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Teddy Schleifer
Teddy Schleifer@teddyschleifer·
NEW: Sergey Brin, his "MAGA Girlfriend" and a $57 million bid to kill the California billionaires tax. The inside story of how a Google cofounder and a gut-health influencer ghosted Matt Mahan and confronted Gavin Newsom — even if Newsom is "handsome." nytimes.com/2026/04/27/us/…
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bitchuneedsoap
bitchuneedsoap@bitchuneedsoap·
SPLC is in a legal box with no clean exit. To defeat the donor fraud charges, they have to argue the informant program was legitimate intelligence work coordinated with federal law enforcement. Bryan Fair already said that on video on April 21st. But the moment that's the defense, three new problems open: Donors did not give money to fund FBI-coordinated intelligence operations. Class action exposure on the actual basis of the donor relationship. 501(c)(3) status doesn't cover serving as a federal intelligence contractor. Tax exemption becomes contestable. Admitting FBI coordination validates exactly the Grassley-Patel-HJC finding that SPLC was feeding the FBI taxonomies used to target American religious communities. The traditional escape hatch in a case like this is graymail. SPLC threatens to expose FBI coordination in discovery. DOJ backs off to protect FBI secrets. Except this DOJ wants that exposure. Patel severed the FBI-SPLC relationship in October. Grassley released documents in June. The Weaponization Working Group is already mapping this. Exposing FBI wrongdoing under the prior administration is a feature, not a cost. The graymail doesn't work because the target doesn't want to protect what you're threatening to expose. Which means SPLC's options narrow to: Plead to narrower charges and accept reputational collapse Go to trial and have the whole operation documented in the public record Drag proceedings out hoping for a political reversal before donor class actions and state AG investigations land There's no fourth door.
bitchuneedsoap@bitchuneedsoap

If SPLC was running paid informants inside violent extremist groups, and SPLC was sharing that intelligence with the FBI, and SPLC's "hate group" designations were showing up in internal FBI memos targeting American religious communities… At what point did SPLC stop being an advocacy organization and start being an intelligence contractor? The indictment unsealed on April 21st describes an informant program that ran from 2014 to 2023. $3 million. Eight informants. Leading figures inside the KKK, Aryan Nations, and National Socialist Party. One was the Imperial Wizard of the United Klans of America. Another was in the online leadership chat that planned Unite the Right. SPLC's own CEO said on video that the intel went to federal law enforcement. Sen. Grassley spent 2023-2025 documenting how SPLC's hate group designations were cited in at least 14 internal FBI intelligence products. One of them, the Richmond memo, proposed FBI source development inside parishes where Latin Mass is celebrated. They interviewed a priest. A choir director. An internal FBI email Grassley obtained: "our overreliance on the SPLC for hate designation is problematic." Two streams of information. One endpoint. The FBI was receiving input on American threats from a 501(c)(3) that was paying people inside the KKK. And using that input to propose surveillance of Catholic parishes. That's an outsourced intelligence operation that nobody voted for and nobody audited. The fraud indictment is the floor of this story.

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